Upworthy Hits 30 Million Unique Visitors

NEW YORK, July 1, 2013 /PRNewswire/ -- In May, some 30 million people visited Upworthy, the sharing network that uses data-driven social media to draw attention to topics that matter. The milestone illustrates the strong, sustained growth being seen by the 14-month-old company across all key metrics:

Dwell time (the length of time the average user spends on the site) now exceeds six minutes. In May, the average dwell time peaked at 7:17.

Subscriber growth continues to rise, passing three million in May. Email subscribers now top 1.1 million, Facebook fans now top 2.1 million, and Upworthy has 120,000 followers on twitter.

At two million, the company now has more Facebook fans than many well-established media companies. Also, according to Facebook, roughly two-thirds of the U.S. population has a friend who is connected to Upworthy.

Upworthy added 300,000 subscribers in one three-day period during May 2013. (PRNewsFoto/Upworthy)

Upworthy's core audience growth continued to increase in May 2013. A viral surge for the most active post of the month increased the...

"Upworthy is the single most socially optimized site we've seen," said Edward Kim, CEO of social-action measurement pioneer SimpleReach, whose clients include Time, Entertainment Weekly, and Forbes. "We track 5,000 publishers, and Upworthy content accounts for some 20% of all recorded social actions we measure. Their posts rank in the top 1% consistently — Upworthy is just a remarkable media network."

"The best part for us is that the videos driving this insane growth are all deeply meaningful — they're about cancer, domestic abuse, gay identity, body image, fracking," said Upworthy co-founder Peter Koechley. "We believe the really important things in the world need better marketing — that if we put in a little effort to make meaningful things intriguing, tens of millions of people actually do care about them. But honestly, even we are surprised we're seeing this much growth so quickly."

According to data from Web site ranking firm Quantcast, Upworthy's 30 million unique visitors in May topped the traffic of several major-media sites, including Hulu.com, People.com, Us Magazine and NBC Sports.

A new way to drive sharing

Upworthy's look-share-subscribe model for socially native content emphasizes engagement — the distribution model succeeds when tens of thousands of members of the Upworthy community choose to share content with their friends, and when those friends are compelled enough to click back to Upworthy.com. Upworthy's proprietary real-time, multi-part testing gauges whether an audience will click on a piece of content, and can improve sharing performance by well more than 180%.

"We're capturing as much of the science of viral content as possible, adding in great human curation and a point of view, and using that combination to lift up the ideas that matter most," said Upworthy co-founder Eli Pariser. "I think we're on our way -- we're seeing big gains from our data-driven tech; our curators are getting very good at finding wonderful, meaningful content; and a huge community is coming together to amplify and spread these ideas far and wide."

The May performance was fueled in part by the company's treatment of a 20-minute video telling the story of 17-year-old terminal cancer patient Zach Sobiech, who spent the end of his life making music. After being promoted by Upworthy, the video garnered more than 15 million page views, was share more than 800,000 times, was Liked more than 1.25 million times on Facebook, and contributed the vast majority of the more than 9 million completed views on YouTube. Sobiech hit Number 1 on iTunes, debuted in the top 10 Hot Digital Songs with Billboard, and the Upworthy post helped raise more than $300,000 for Sobiech's cancer research charity." Upworthy.com added 300,000 subscribers in three days.

Upworthy elevates things that matter in a way that reaches millions. Every day, curators unearth and spotlight awesome, meaningful content using a proprietary testing approach that combines social science and an irresistibly shareable point of view. Co-founders Eli Pariser (of MoveOn.org) and Peter Koechley (formerly of The Onion) raised $4 million in initial financing from a group that included prominent individual investors like Facebook co-founder Chris Hughes, Reddit co-founder Alexis Ohanian, and BuzzFeed co-founder John Johnson. Learn more at http://www.upworthy.com.